Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-18T12:43:02.541Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

VI. Speeches

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2016

Get access

Extract

Utterances reported in direct speech abound in Herodotus: often conversations or isolated dicta, sometimes debates on major questions of policy or strategy, e.g. vii. 8-11. In Thucydides short utterances are very rare, but speeches play a very important role; the occasions range from ‘full-dress’ debates on momentous issues (e.g. i. 67–88) to the encouragement given by commanders to troops before battle (e.g. ii. 87–9).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1973

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page no 21 note 1 ‘As I thought. . .’; contrast 22. 2 on actions and events, ‘and not as I thought. . .’.

page no 21 note 2 Minutely discussed by Grosskinsky, A., Das Programm des Thukydides (Berlin, 1936).Google Scholar

page no 21 note 3 Antiphon began the circulation in writing of forensic speeches; the fragmentary Lysias xxxiv is the earliest (403) symbuleutic speech.

page no 22 note 1 What a speaker needs to say is often irrational. Cf.Winnington-Ingram, R. P., BICS xii (1965), 7082.Google Scholar

page no 22 note 2 In vii. 49. 3 τò ξύμπαν είπεῖν serves this purpose; not so τò ξύμπαν . . . γνῶμεν in iv. 63. 2 or тò ξύμπαν in vi. 37. 2.

page no 22 note 3 iv. 85. 4 opposes ἒργῳ to γνώμη.

page no 23 note 1 Later historians used speeches, too; on the history of the genre see Walbank, F. W., Speeches in Greek Historians (Oxford, 1965)Google Scholar.

page no 23 note 2 Cf.Brunt, P. A., REG lxv (1952), 5996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

page no 23 note 3 Aristophanes Wasps 1186–1205 suggests that there was much narrative and reminiscence at Athenian parties.

page no 24 note 1 Cf.Grant, J. R., CQ N.S. XV (1965), 261-6CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

page no 26 note 1 I am in sympathy with the ξύμπασα γνώμη of Gomme, A. W., Essays in Greek History and Literature (Oxford, 1937), 156-89Google Scholar.

page no 27 note 1 Cf.Andrewes, A., PCPhS N.S. vi (1960), 19.Google Scholar